A Systematic Review: Understanding the effects of story-based interventions for refugee children at risk for mental health conditions. 公开
Kim, JinYoung (Spring 2019)
Abstract
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child articulates the promotion and dissemination of children’s books for a child’s social, spiritual, and physical and mental health (UNICEF 1989). However, there is a gap in the literature about the potential effects of children’s books, or story-based interventions for refugee children. With the high prevalence of depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms among refugee children, it is vital to develop culturally appropriate and empirically tested interventions to lessen the barriers of language, service utilization, and stigma associated with mental health interventions (Attanayake et al., 2009; Bogic, Njoku, & Priebe, 2015; Lustig et al., 2003). Thus, this systematic narrative synthesis aims to understand the effects of story-based interventions for refugee children at risk for mental health issues.
The synthesis found three main themes surrounding story-based interventions for refugee children. First, studies with refugee participants from multiple populations recruited and conducted their interventions in higher income countries, whereas interventions targeting a specific refugee population recruited and conducted their intervention at the conflict site or refugee camp. Second, the intervention strategies varied across the studies depending on intervention length, group v. individual-based approaches, and professional v. non-professional facilitators. Third, story-based interventions involving characters, otherwise known as children’s book interventions, are best suited for children younger than 7 years of age. This is important because refugee children who are younger than 7 years of age may not have the language capacity to understand their own complex emotions and traumas from their pervious experiences. Thus, children’s book interventions for children 7 years of age and younger should develop main characters who experience similar refugee experiences and emotions as the refugee children. Additionally, this review found components of story-based interventions to be a promising supplemental tool for future mental health therapies because the approach invites refugee children to bring their experiences and cultural backgrounds into the intervention to work through their emotions associated with traumatic events. However, further research is required, not only to understand the influence and measurement of cultural background, but the priority of mental health needs for the refugee children.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction 1
Introduction and Rationale 1
Chapter 2 Literature Review 4
Introduction 4
Theories, Models, and Applications 6
Conclusion and Significance 12
Chapter 3 Methodology 14
Introduction 14
Research Design and Study Characteristics 14
Data Extraction and Analysis 15
Outcome Measures 16
Chapter 4 Results 18
Introduction 18
Refugee Populations and Context 19
Intervention Design 20
Storytelling v. Autobiography 25
Chapter 5 Discussions and Conclusions 28
Introduction 28
Interpretation of the Results 28
Application Across Refugee Populations 32
Children’s Books as an Intervention 32 33
Conclusions, Implications, and Recommendations 35
References 38
Appendix 1 45
Figure 1: Diagram of Identified Literature 45
Table 1: Summary of Study Populations and Intervention Components 46
Table 2: Summary of Intervention Measures and Results 50
Appendix 2 53
APA Magination Press Preliminary Proposal 53
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